Ohio History Journal

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SONG WRITERS OF OHIO

SONG WRITERS OF OHIO.

 

C. B. GALBREATH.

If a man were permitted to make all the ballads, he need not care

who should make the laws of a nation.--ANDREW FLETCHER.

No names are deathless save those of the world's singers. - FRANCES

E. WILLARD.

If this ascription of power and immortality seems somewhat

sweeping and a little too poetically generous, the fact remains

that music, affecting as it does the emotional in man and touch-

ing all its keys, exerts a distinct influence on individual and

national destiny; and the simple songs that find their way to the

universal heart shall survive long after the singer has departed

and his very name, to the millions who have felt the spell of his

genius, has ceased to be even a memory. The popular melody

is one of the avenues through which the human soul finds ex-

pression. If it has its charm "to soothe the savage breast," it

has likewise its stimulus to action. With paeans on their lips

men "have crowded the road to death as to a festival." In our

annals the song writers deserve a place. From lullaby to bat-

tle hymn they help to mould character and build the state.

Ohio is pre-eminent among our sisterhood of common-

wealths through the achievements of her sons in war and states-

manship. Attention has recently been directed to the fact that

she has already made respectable progress in the fields of science

and letters. It is the purpose of the writer to bring a humble

but truthful tribute to her neglected sons of song, whose simple

lays have gone beyond the boundaries of the Buckeye State and

become a part of the music of the world.

It is a source of regret that the sudden departure of our

oldest and most famous singer calls forth the first of these

sketches three months earlier than the intended date of publica-

tion. Fortunately, a mass of material, most of it direct from the

lips and pen of the aged minstrel, is at hand, and numerous

omissions and inaccuracies in articles already printed seem to

justify the somewhat hasty preparation of this contribution.

(504)